http://www.sacbee.com/114/story/133310.html
Big Klamath River chinook
salmon run may ease restrictions
March 6, 2007 Sacramento Bee
Followed by
Thousands of chinook returned to
Klamath River
Santa Cruz Sentinel
Chinook salmon returned to the Klamath River by
the thousands this past fall in contrast to the
sharp decline in chinook found in the Sacramento
River and its tributaries.
The Klamath River count will likely lead to fewer
restrictions on local salmon fishermen this year,
said biologist Marc Heisdorf, who monitors the
salmon population for the California Department of
Fish and Game.
Heisdorf said Monday that he doesn't expect this
year's Klamath River salmon fishing restrictions
to be as severe as last year due because of the
high count. Salmon season opens next month for
sport fishermen and in May for commercial boats.
As many as 65,000 chinook returned to the Klamath
River during the fall run, nearly double the
minimum required by state and federal fisheries
regulators who monitor the declining population.
Hundreds of commercial salmon fishermen from
Eureka to Morro Bay were stuck in port last season
because of three consecutive years of declining
numbers of chinook in the river.
The federal Pacific Fishery Management Council
will discuss this year's restrictions Friday in
Sacramento and season guidelines are scheduled to
be approved April 6.
The Pacific Fishery Management Council said the
Sacramento River area salmon count was about half
the previous season run, the lowest numbers since
1992. In the Sacramento River, there were an
estimated 435,000 chinook.
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http://www.santacruzsentinel.com:80/archive/2007/March/06/local/stories/05local.htm
Thousands of chinook returned
to Klamath River
by TOM RAGAN Santa Cruz Sentinel MOSS LANDING
3/6/07
Thousands of chinook returned to the Klamath
River this past fall, which likely means fewer
restrictions on local salmon fishermen this year,
a state fisheries expert said Monday.
Marc Heisdorf, a marine biologist whose job is to
monitor the salmon population for the California
Department of Fish and Game, said he doesn't
expect this year's salmon fishing restrictions to
be as severe as last year due to the plenitude.
Salmon season opens in early April for sport
fishermen and in May for commercial boats.
As many as 65,000 chinook returned to the Klamath
River during the fall run, nearly double the
minimum required by the state and federal
fisheries regulators who monitor the declining
population.
Last year commercial salmon fishermen were all but
banned from fishing off the California Coast for
most of the summer — the result of three
consecutive years of declining numbers of chinook
in the river. Marine biologists said more Klamath
River fish needed to make it back to the river to
spawn to ensure the run's survival, so hundreds of
commercial salmon fishermen from Eureka to Morro
Bay were stuck in port. Sport fishermen —
thousands chase the sought-after chinook up and
down the coast — also saw season restrictions.
"This year, I'd imagine that the closer you are to
the Klamath River, the more restrictions you'll
have and the fewer salmon you'll be able to
catch," Heisdorf said from his office in Santa
Rosa. "But it looks like the Monterey Bay is going
to be OK this year"
Yet even the optimistic Heisdorf tempered his
prediction, adding "anything can happen"
The federal Pacific Fishery Management Council is
set to discuss this year's restrictions Friday in
Sacramento. Season guiedlines are scheduled ti be
approved April 6, the day before sports fishing
season begins. The commercial season opens May 1.
Though the council is a federal agency that is
part to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration, the state Department of Fish and
Game generally follows NOAA's recommendations,
said Steve Martarano, a spokesman for Fish and
Game. Advertisement
"The restrictions always range between being
really conservative, midway or liberal," Martarano
said. "We'll see what happens this year"
But Heisdorf said he doesn't foresee any problem,
especially in light of the fact that nearly
300,000 chinook have returned to the Central
Valley rivers — well over the minimum 122,000
chinook required under the chinook conservation
program.
The population cycle involving the chinook works
this way: the fish generally leave the rivers and
swim into the ocean at ages 1 and 2.
Between 2 and 4, they live in the ocean, then
return to the rivers to spawn.
Once they swim upstream to spawn, they die,
according to Heisdorf.
But new eggs have been fertilized and new fish
born, creating a new cycle.
But the chinook population in the Klamath River
has seen better days, which resulted in last
year's closures.
"We had no income. I lost thousands of dollars,"
said Dennis Wong, owner of Woodward Marine, a
fishing supply store in Moss Landing. "It wasn't
the worst I'd ever seen in terms of no fish, but
it was the worst I've seen in terms of government
intervention"
Contact Tom Ragan at tragan@santacruzsentinel.com.
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